L&S America Online   Subscribe
Advertise
Home Lighting Sound AmericaIndustry News Contacts
NewsNews
NewsNews

-Today's News

-Last 7 Days

-Theatre in Review

-Business News + Industry Support

-People News

-Product News

-Subscribe to News

-Subscribe to LSA Mag

-News Archive

-Media Kit

Renegade Designs Lighting for Kasabian Tour

Nick Gray, of London, UK-based creative lighting design practice Renegade, has designed the lighting for the current Kasabian tour, which sees the UK indie rockers play several warm-up shows ahead of headline slots at leading UK festivals, Rockness in Inverness and the Isle of Wight, as well as Rock Werchter in Belgium.

Gray's design is based around two trussing arches, which move into three different positions during the show, starting in a position flat to the stage. These are automated via a Kinesys system, which is supplied by the tour's lighting contractor Neg Earth. The show is operated on the road by Paul Kell, working for Renegade.

The starting point for this design -- key elements of which will also be condensed into a floor-based festival package to augment the house rigs at each event to ensure continuity and style -- was last year's West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum tour, which saw the band perform inside an LED "picture frame." Gray wanted to evoke a completely different ambience on stage for this tour, which is not related to any album -- the release of the group's fourth studio album is slated for autumn -- and give it an identity of its own.

Discussions with the band revealed that they favored a big, old-school light show, with lots of classic beam effects and beautiful picturesque balanced looks. He therefore decided on a departure from video elements to concentrate on lighting alone to create a bold, geometrically balanced visual picture.

He also took into account standard Kasabian prerequisites like the group's dislike of front lighting, so the front truss is minimalist, with eight ETC Source Fours for very subtle key lighting, plus four strobes and four blinders.

The arches are rigged with batches of three Clay Paky Alpha Beam 300 moving lights, lots of i-Pix BB4 LED blinders and drop bars containing Martin Professional MAC 301 LED washes, also grouped together in threes.

Downstage on the floor are two Mac 2000 washes per side to cross-light the band from low levels, again keeping it subtle and relatively subdued along the front of stage "The idea is having a dramatic more theatrical style that plays with areas of darkness and shadow rather than direct lighting," explains Gray.

Upstage at the back is a row of eight Clay Paky Alpha Beam 1500s, mounted on truss sections on the floor, to provide dramatic back light and 'beam technology' effects.

When the group plays festivals, all the lights -- Mac 301s, BB4s, blinders, and the Alpha Beam 1500s -- are rigged onto 8' truss sections and a series of upright scaffolding pieces, which are wheeled on and offstage quickly and efficiently in the changeover.

There were no rehearsals at the start of the tour; the band went straight into the first show in Sheffield, with Kell using a High End Systems Wholehog III for control and taking advantage of Renegade's WYSIWYG facilities to pre-plot as much of the show as possible.

Says Gray, "It's great to be out with Kasabian again; we love working with them and each year they grow and develop and allow us to continue being innovative with the look and feel of the live show. It's going to be a big year for them, especially once the album is released, with some large shows planned for later on and the album that promises to be awesome."

Renegade is also busy with other current music and concert touring projects, including Faithless, who are out with a new design from Jonny Gaskell, plus Orbital and G2, featuring Groove Armada's "Red Light Decks & Effects" DJ set.

WWWwww.renegadedesign.co.uk


(22 June 2011)

E-mail this story to a friendE-mail this story to a friend

LSA Goes Digital - Check It Out!

  Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on Facebook

LSA PLASA Focus